Showing posts with label handwoven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handwoven. Show all posts

Join us at VIDEA's Fair Trade Fair in Victoria, BC!

Join TAMMACHAT Natural Textiles as we present our naturally dyed, fairly traded handwoven textiles again at the VIDEA  Fair Trade Fair in Victoria, BC. You'll find a variety of pieces perfect for gift giving or for yourself. This year we'll feature organic silk SCARVES handcrafted by women artisans in rural Thailand. And you'll find other textile treasures too.


VIDEA's FAIR TRADE FAIR
Saturday, November 26, 2016
10am-4pm
First Metropolitan Church Hall
932 Balmoral Street
Victoria, BC  Canada
www.videa.ca


Introducing TAMMACHAT Natural Textiles
TAMMACHAT is a social enterprise (established in 2007) that believes in fair trade -- not charity -- as a model for supporting both artisans in the developing world and consumers who want to shop ethically. Concern for people and the planet before profits drives TAMMACHAT's work. Our fair trade relationships are based on long-term commitment to women's artisan groups, advance payments, fair prices (set by the artisans), and mutual respect and learning.


TAMMACHAT's fairly traded textiles from Thailand and Laos are hand-loomed or hand-stitched, and are -- for the most part -- coloured with sustainably created, beautiful natural dyes. They are made by women farmers, who mostly grow rice, the staple food in this region. The work of creating and dyeing yarns, then weaving them into fabrics for unique products provides additional important income to rural families, and helps sustain communities and traditions.
For more about the women's weaving groups that create these special textiles, visit our Artisans page. And browse through our blog for stories from our annual trips where we have worked for years directly with these artisan groups.


Final big show on Nova Scotia's South Shore

For 7 amazing years, TAMMACHAT has visited and worked with more than a dozen weaving co-ops, social enterprises, certified fair trade businesses and family weaving groups in Thailand and Laos.

Our heartfelt thanks go out to the hundreds of women weavers who welcomed us into partnership to preserve their artistic and cultural traditions, to enhance the status of women and to create additional income for rural families. Now it's time for a change. Read more...

But first, we invite you to join us for our final big show of 2014 in Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia: Oct. 3-5, 2014, during the Great Scarecrow Festival & Antique Show. More details...


30% off TAMMACHAT silk fabrics!

Our fairly traded, handwoven silk fabrics are available by special order at 30% off listed prices! Visit our SHOP page to see what's available. Contact us to arrange a private viewing if you're in Nova Scotia.

Perfect for a range of sewing projects: from jackets, blouses, skirts and pants to cushion covers, table runners and more -- get your creative juices flowing! All our silk fabrics are created by women's weaving groups in rural Thailand.

[See our previous blog post for other ways to connect with TAMMACHAT in 2014.]

TAMMACHAT handwoven silk fabrics
Our handwoven, fairly traded silk fabrics are 30% off listed prices.
Visit our SHOP page for details.

Connect with TAMMACHAT in 2014!


  • Browse our fairly traded textiles at one of our upcoming shows in Nova Scotia in the summer and fall of 2014. See our Events page for listings.
  • Order silk scarves and fabric by email – you can find them online.
  • Find our wrap pants, reversible hats and other TAMMACHAT textiles at the Cosmic Hippie Boutique at 498C Main St. in Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia.
  • Re-discover our website and blog where we archive our stories from years of visits with the amazing women's weaving groups that welcomed us. By keeping the TAMMACHAT website online, we continue to network those interested in SE Asian and fair trade textiles, weaving co-ops and more. This  will continue to be an important part of our work to promote fair trade and women's empowerment.
  • Read our weaving books online. Preview them for free in our Blurb bookstore, buy an ebook or order a soft/hardcover edition. Great gifts!
Find TAMMACHAT cotton wrap pants, hats and more at
the Cosmic Hippie Boutique, 498C Main St., Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia




A sampling of handwoven, silk fabrics available from TAMMACHAT.


Enjoy photos from Thailand, Laos & Burma

Get a taste of our travels through our Facebook Photo Albums (open to all, not just Facebook users):







Festival of Traditional Arts in a Kaliang Village

Mai of Junhom Banton has kindly invited us to join her at a unique textile festival at a nearby village of Karen people (known in Thai as Kaliang.) The festival is being sponsored by Ban Lai Kaew Weavers, a long-standing fair trade textile group that creates beautiful, naturally-dyed textiles on backstrap looms.


When we arrive, weaving exhibits have already been mounted in some of the traditional buildings that dot the site. In one, there's an extensive exhibit of Kaliang textiles, dyed with the traditional natural dyes that are being revived here in Doi Tao district. Nearby there’s also a display of jok (elaborate supplementary weft-patterned weaving) for which the neighbouring district of Chom Thong is famous.


A large stage has been constructed in the usual country fashion – a wooden platform resting on steel barrels. The platform is then covered with mats. Today the festival name, crafted out of handspun cotton skeins, hangs above the stage. Children, in traditional Kaliang clothing, gleefully run about the site, blowing off some steam before their dance performance.



We wander to an open area, where women are preparing a dye bath with annatto (kamset in Thai, bikkii in Kaliang). Young women from local schools, here for a cultural learning day, are invited to smash the pods with a large wooden pestle in a hardwood trough. They’re instructed by an older woman to leave it to simmer for 1 hour.


Nearby, a bird-like grandmother has begun to spin cotton on a traditional wheel, smaller than the Lao version we've seen by the Mekong, but otherwise the same. A larger, old woman soon joins her with another wheel. Both wear layers upon layers of black beads around their necks and larger white beads on their wrists. The tiny woman chews betel, the larger smokes a pipe, as many Kaliang women do.



While elaborately patterned on a backstrap loom, the traditional Kaliang clothing is simply constructed, similar to a Mayan huipil and corte. The top is seamed vertically and left open in the middle, while the skirt is seamed horizontally. Colours are now usually made with chemical dyes, although the Kaliang’s natural dye traditions are being revived and, today, are being celebrated.


One of the many young women watching, all wearing their school’s sports day attire, is persuaded to try her hand at spinning. The thread soon breaks and the first grandmother comes to her rescue.


Back at the dye pot, the students learn to strain out the annatto with a tool that looks like a giant wok strainer.


An older woman adds water soaked with yahoo (ash water) for mordant. Then they add the skeins of handspun cotton and simmer over the fire. After another 30 minutes the yarns emerge in the deep orange usually associated with Buddhist monks, although this traditional and natural colour has much more depth and substance than the brighter and thinner orange more commonly seen now.


Two pick-up trucks pass by, filled with more students. They shout to Ellen, who is wearing a traditional dress worn by Kaliang maidens, which she was offered upon our arrival. Ellen accepts their offer and climbs aboard. They drive for about 10 minutes and arrive at a field sparsely populated with cotton plants. The noon-day sun is hot, but Ellen happily picks cotton – both white and brown varieties – side-by-side with urban students from Bangkok and others from Kaliang villages further north. She wonders if any of them will be inspired to continue these traditions.



After Ellen returns from her outing, we return to the display of naturally dyed backstrap weaving. Tucked on a low shelf, we find lovely placemats with designs that are an appealing blend of homespun and abstract-modern. We sort through the pile and choose dozens that will make their way later this year to a table near you.

At the same display, we are pleased to bump into Ajarn Nittaya Mahachaiwong from Fai Gaem Mai of Chiang Mai University. (That’s the Cotton and Silk Project we’ve worked with for years to source Eri silk). Today she’s wearing an extraordinary coat fashioned from Kaliang fabric. She’s here to participate in the technical discussions that are part of the day’s events. However, the talks are intended for the local participants and our ride is about to depart, so we say thank you to our hosts and set out for the bus station with our bags of treasure.

Slow Fashion that Puts People First

An article in Urban Times by TAMMACHAT Natural Textiles' co-founder Alleson Kase explores TAMMACHAT's approach to fair trade and introduces some of our weaving partners.


Spinning organic cotton in Thailand
Organic silk scarf from Thailand
Organic silk scarf from Laos



Beauties and treasures ready for Quilt Canada 2012

Find these beauties and treasures -- and many more -- at Quilt Canada 2012 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. TAMMACHAT Natural Textiles' booth, with displays and wares changing daily, will be a show within itself. Many pieces are perfect for use in fibre art creations. Many are perfect just as they are.

All TAMMACHAT textiles are handwoven or hand-stitched, mostly coloured with natural dyes. All are fairly traded, as always, to bring income to rural women in Thailand and Laos.

Visit us in Booth 101 in the Merchant Mall, Dalplex at Dalhousie University. Map

Wed., May 30, 2012 -- 9am - 5pm
Thurs., May 31, 2012 -- 9am - 5pm
Fri., June 1, 2012 -- 9am - 8pm
Sat., June 2, 2012 -- 9am - 5pm


Detail of Hmong Flower Cloth

Detail of Hmong Flower Cloth

Detail of Hmong Flower Cloth

Hmong Flower Cloths

Hmong Flower Cloths

Hmong Story Cloth

Hmong Story Cloth

Handwoven cotton organizing pouches

Cotton scarves, handwoven on a backstrap loom
Handwoven cotton shirt

Handwoven cotton jacket

Handwoven cotton samplers for projects

Glorious, naturally dyed, organic silk fabrics

Handwoven "mudmee" designs in indigo cotton

Blossom organic silk travel jewellery pouches

Handwoven Eri silk scarves

Handwoven organic silk scarves in many designs & colours

Fresh, new handcrafted textiles now online

We're delighted to bring you fresh, new textiles from our recent trip in Thailand and Laos.  Now available on TAMMACHAT's website.

All our textiles are...Artisanal. Handwoven. Fair trade. Sustainable. Ethical. Eco.

Cotton Scarves and Shawls: handspun, chunky textures, organic cotton, lots of indigo.


Organic Silk Scarves: beautiful, beautiful, beautiful in a lovely range of colours.



 Eri Silk Scarves: handspun, textured, for women and men.



And the Blossom Travel Jewelry Pouch in Organic Silk is here and ready for you!


Drop by TAMMACHAT's website to find more offerings over the next few weeks. Follow us on Facebook  and Twitter for timely postings.